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The phrase "rocket to stardom" is correct and usable in written English
It can be used to describe someone who quickly gains fame or success, often in the entertainment industry. Example: "After her breakout role in the blockbuster film, she experienced a rocket to stardom that left everyone in awe."
Exact(3)
The Monkees But it would be with the Monkees in 1966 that Jones would rocket to stardom.
Everyone won't be seeing the same accounts, so specific users won't suddenly rocket to stardom like in the early days of Twitter's Suggested User List.
As wonderful as it would be to rocket to stardom in your first picture, most actors work steadily for years before being noticed, if they get noticed at all.
Similar(56)
Less than three years old, the Chicago-based company has rocketed to stardom.
Weather has always played a big role in people's lives & in the last 10 years or so, thanks to radio & TV, the weather has rocketed to stardom.
This from a woman who rocketed to stardom because her party tapped her in 1984 in its pursuit of female voters?
The nub of his grievance was that they had rocketed to stardom without "driving up and down the M1 in a van for 15 years".
Asked what it meant to have matched Hoy's record, Kenny said: "I was in Beijing when Chris rocketed to stardom … To be doing the same thing eight years later is amazing.
For one thing, Farley's story, while undeniably sad, is also undeniably familiar: talented performer rockets to stardom and then plummets back to earth, the victim of his own excessive appetites.
Large stretches of the book are turned over to the years from 1977 to the mid-80s when he was rocketed to stardom on the back of his first album, My Aim Is True.
The New Yorker, June 18 , 1955P. 17 Weather has always played a big role in people's lives & in the last 10 years or so, thanks to radio & TV, the weather has rocketed to stardom.
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